When traveling to a country different from his own, an individual may be intrigued and astounded by the sights, smells and the people he discovers. This all plays a part in the experience the tourist comes out for and pays for. The individual plans and books this visit to enjoy his stay at the exotic land. By doing so, the individual can take a break from the life he left back in his hometown and use this opportunity to escape its harsh realities. However, what they don't realize is that they are also stepping into the lives and homes of others and ultimately, their reality. Keeping an ignorant mindset may be beneficial for the tourist, but may be destructive for the culture and lives of the natives. By sticking to the surface, the tourist objectifies the things he or she experiences in their visit by focusing on what they sense in they new land and thus, is able to view the land as paradise and feel as if they entered a perfect world. The short story "A Small Place," written by Jamaica Kincaid, shows when traveling to a different nation, people only focus on the beauty of the land. The tourist stays on the surface so he does not have to think about the negative conditions and lifestyles within the country. Kincaid describes how the tourist buys their experience and how they affect colonialization. This typical tourist behavior in which Kincaid mocks throughout her writing can be seen in the Vogue article “Ticket to Paradise.”

Jamaica Kincaid walks the reader through what a typical tourist does in Antigua. Kincaid uses second person point of view throughout her writing while incorporating a sarcastic tone. By using a second person point of view, she forces the readers into the text, giving them a closer experience. She tells you what to feel, think and do. Kincaid introduces Antigua as done in a brochure making it seem like a consumer object. She makes specific, yet at the same time, general statements to let the reader relate to the text easily. Kincaid...

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...trade was outlawed, and much of the wrath directed against Britain by the natives, was because of its policy of opposing slavery and witchcraft, which were thoroughly ingrained into native African culture. Millions of dollars were spent on humanitarian relief for the natives; hundreds of missionaries risked their lives to bring the best aspects of civilization to the African tribes. The problems of Africa have always been serious and difficult of redress, before, during, and after colonization, but it is certain that many of the most committed of British colonizers, were motivated to alleviate the suffering of the native populations, and not entirely driven by greed.
FRENCH COLONIAL CONQUEST IN AFRICA
French colonial expansion wasn't limited to the New World. In Senegal in West Africa, the French began to establish trading posts along the coast in 1624. In 1664, the French East India Company was established to compete for trade in the east. With the decay of the Ottoman Empire, in 1830 the French seized Algiers, thus beginning the colonization of French North Africa.
The French looked down on the Africans and on Africans culture. Though they had a social policy to buttress their colonial rule in Africa, known as “the assimilation policy.” This policy was based on the very laudable revolutionary ideal of human equality, but only under French suzerainty.
In February 1885, the main European powers who were actively vying for control of large parts of...

...the characters actions and the cropping of people and the fence of the ticket counter create an open frame that leads to the next shot of the train pulling away from the station, then a sudden pan to the businessman running into the frame, chasing the train ,to maintain the fast and urgent pacing.
A handheld tracking shot follows Murray as he runs along the boarding platform after the train he was trying to catch, as Murray runs past the camera, the camera pans to follow behind him and reveals the train, moving slightly faster than the businessman can run
The next shot then frames the back of the caboose and an Indian boy standing in the right third of the frame, the camera slowly tilts down to reveal the name of the train "the Darjeelinglimited" and also the title of the movie
An extreme close up profile of Murray's character as he screams wait! Wait! Murray's head hides a younger man, adrien Brody, who comes into view as he runs slightly faster past Murray. They exchange glances as brody outruns murray in a mad dash for the train. While the audience has been lead to believe that the businessman was the protagonist we were to follow on this adventure he instead falls behind
Fast paced Indian music cuts out and a slower song this time tomorrow by the kinks begins to play, the next shot is a slow motion dolly tracking shot following the train in the left third of the frame as brody's character, peter enters into the frame from the...

...Lexicon series created by the Institute for
Anarchist Studies/Anarchiststudies.org
“Colonialism” by Maia Ramnath
Series design by Josh MacPhee/Justseeds.org
Printed by P&L/Pandlprinting.com
February 2012
reversing the process of dispossession;
dismantling relationships of inequity
and the legal/governmental structures
that protect them; halting the suck of
wealth extraction from the bottom to
the top of the pyramid; restoration of
the commons; and refusal to sacrifice
the priorities of collective social wellbeing to the profits of an elite few.
When externalized and mapped onto
racialized divisions between an elite
and a population to which it is seen as
external, these grievances are all aspects
of the colonization process.
To struggle against it, then,
must also include historically
contextualizing our own economic,
political, and geographic locations.
This enables us, among other things, to
understand the connections between the
rights of immigrants and indigenous
peoples, both forcibly displaced by the
14
ALISM
LONI
CO
C
olonialism can refer
to a transnational
process of domination, the policies
by which it is carried out, and
the ideologies that underwrite
it. Modern colonialism has taken
various forms since the Iberian,
British, and French (and later
German, Belgian, and Italian)
incursions into Asia, Africa, and
the Americas—whether for armed
trade, armed missionizing, or armed
settlement—began to escalate...

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Sridharaswamy on Sri Ramaswamy garu according to the will of Sripada
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and Datta devotees are coming to this...

...KOMATSU LIMITED
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CHANGE IN EME INDUSTRY-:
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...Executive summary
As a part of the Woolworths Limited, Woolworths is Australia’s largest and most popular retailer with 3199 stores throughout Australia and New Zealand. The purpose of this report is to introduce Woolworths and how it deals with its suppliers, inventory management and quality.
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CONTENTS
Executive summary 1
Introduction 3
Suppliers 3
Inventory management 4
Quality management 6
Comments 8
Conclusion 8
Recommendations 9
References 10
Total Words: 1498
Introduction
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3 Report – Macroeconomics
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...﻿
LIMITED COMPANY
A limited company is incorporated under the Company Act 1965. it can be :
1. Limited company by guarantee
2. Limited company by share
a ) Private limited company ( Sdn. Bhd. )
b ) Foreign Limited company
3. Unlimited company
PRIVATE LIMITED COMPANY
What is a Private Limited Company?
Private Limited company is a company limited by shares, and this type of Company cannot be publicly traded. A Private Limited Company, sometimes simply called a Limited company, is the most common type of incorporation service
Characteristic :
1 - Right and Responsibility
A company has a specific right and responsibility. It can acquire asset under its own name. A company can also take legal action and face legal action under its own name.
2 - Life span
the life span of the company is not dependent upon the death or resignation of its member.
3 - Liabilities
The liabilities of the members in a company are limited to the total share contributed to the company's capital.
4 - Membership
A company must have a least two member who are of Malaysian nationality.
TERMS AND CONDITIONS
i. members does not exceed 50 people.
ii. Specific authority to transfer ownership of member's share with the approval of the company's Board of Director
iii. company is not allowed to offer or sell any share or...